The wild cost of invasive feral animals worldwide

Ismael Soto* (Corresponding Author), Paride Balzani, Francisco J Oficialdegui, Carlos Molinero, Antonín Kouba, Danish A Ahmed, Anna J Turbelin, Emma J Hudgins, Thomas W Bodey, Showkat Ahmad Gojery, Franck Courchamp, Ross N Cuthbert, Phillip J Haubrock

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Invasive non-native species are a growing burden to economies worldwide. While domesticated animals (i.e. livestock, beasts of burden or pets) have enabled our ways of life and provide sustenance for countless individuals, they may cause substantial impacts when they escape or are released (i.e. become feral) and then become invasive with impacts. We used the InvaCost database to evaluate monetary impacts from species in the Domestic Animal Diversity Information System database. We found a total cost of $141.95 billion from only 18 invasive feral species. Invasive feral livestock incurred the highest costs at $90.03 billion, with pets contributing $50.93 billion and beasts of burden having much lower costs at $0.98 billion. Agriculture was the most affected sector at $80.79 billion, followed by the Environment ($43.44 billion), and Authorities-Stakeholders sectors ($5.52 billion). Damage costs comprised the majority ($124.94 billion), with management and mixed damage-management costs making up the rest ($9.62 and $7.38 billion, respectively). These economic impacts were observed globally, where Oceania, North America and Europe were the most impacted regions. Islands recorded a higher economic burden than continental areas, with livestock species dominating costs more on islands than mainlands compared to other feral species. The costs of invasive feral animals were on average twice higher than those of wild species. The management of invasive feral populations requires higher investment, updated regulations, and comprehensive risk assessments. These are especially complex when considering the potential conflicts arising from interventions with species that have close ties to humans. Effective communication to raise public awareness of the impacts of feral populations and appropriate legislation to prevent or control such invasive feral populations will substantially contribute to minimizing their socioeconomic and environmental impacts.

Original languageEnglish
Article number169281
Number of pages11
JournalScience of the Total Environment
Volume912
Early online date31 Dec 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 20 Feb 2024

Bibliographical note

Acknowledgments
We would like to express our gratitude to PresentationGO for providing the free PowerPoint funnel chart template, which was adapted for use in Fig. 1 of this study. IS is supported by the Grant Agency of the University of South Bohemia, project number 065/2022/Z. RNC is funded by the Leverhulme Trust (ECF-2021-001).

Keywords

  • Biological invasions
  • Agriculture
  • Non-native species
  • Economic impacts
  • Conservation
  • InvaCost

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